James K Polk

John Tyler

John Tyler was the 10th U.S. President, the first vice president to become president after a death in office and a key figure in Texas annexation.

Born
1790 CE
Died
1862 CE
Role
10th President of the United States

10th President of the United States (1790–1862)

Portrait of John Tyler in formal presidential attire
Facts

John Tyler timeline facts

Selected specifics from this profile's life story.

1790–1807
Virginia upbringing

John Tyler was born in Virginia in 1790 into a slaveholding political family committed to states' rights and planter republicanism.

1841
Vice presidency

Chosen as William Henry Harrison's running mate in 1840, Tyler balanced the Whig ticket but did not share much of the party's programme.

1841–1845
Policy achievements

Tyler's major achievement was pushing Texas annexation, a decision that expanded the United States and intensified the slavery crisis.

1861–1862
Final years

Tyler died in 1862 after being elected to the Confederate Congress, the only former U.S. president buried under a rebel flag.

Life Journey

A presidency shaped by precedent, conflict and independence

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1790–1807

Virginia upbringing

John Tyler was born in Virginia in 1790 into a slaveholding political family committed to states' rights and planter republicanism.

1807–1825

Legal and political start

Tyler became a lawyer, state legislator, congressman and governor, building a career around strict construction and suspicion of federal power.

1825–1840

National presence

Tyler moved from Democratic-Republican politics toward the Whigs because he opposed Andrew Jackson's use of executive power.

1841

Vice presidency

Chosen as William Henry Harrison's running mate in 1840, Tyler balanced the Whig ticket but did not share much of the party's programme.

1841

Unexpected presidency

After Harrison died in April 1841, Tyler insisted he was full president, not acting president, creating the Tyler Precedent.

1841–1844

Party conflict

Tyler vetoed Whig bank bills, prompting most of his cabinet to resign and the Whig Party to expel him.

1841–1845

Policy achievements

Tyler's major achievement was pushing Texas annexation, a decision that expanded the United States and intensified the slavery crisis.

1845–1861

Later political stance

After leaving office, Tyler defended southern interests and tried briefly to mediate the secession crisis before siding with Virginia.

1861–1862

Final years

Tyler died in 1862 after being elected to the Confederate Congress, the only former U.S. president buried under a rebel flag.

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American Presidents lineage
Lineage47 presidents
American Presidents
1789 CE–present

The succession of American presidents from George Washington to today.

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Tertiary paths

Content note

This profile is written for educational use and connects to related Stories of History pages. Illustrations are original artistic interpretations.

References

Sources & Further Reading

Reliable reference works, archives and reading paths connected to this profile.

Further reading

  1. Encyclopaedia Britannica, Search results for John Tyler,” accessed June 2026.Open source
  2. WorldCat, Books and library holdings for John Tyler,” accessed June 2026.Open source

Primary sources

  1. Library of Congress, Search results for John Tyler,” accessed June 2026.Open source

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